Navajos terrorized by an 'Unseen arrow'. - Old superstition is revived by slaying after woman's 'Death by curse.' - Fear of the "unseen arrow" is stirring superstitious Navajos after reports of the fatal shooting of a northern reservation brave by...

Navajos terrorized by an 'Unseen arrow'. - Old superstition is revived by slaying after woman's 'Death by curse.' - Fear of the "unseen arrow" is stirring superstitious Navajos after reports of the fatal shooting of a northern reservation brave by...

Navajos terrorized by an 'Unseen arrow'. - Old superstition is revived by slaying after woman's 'Death by curse.' - Fear of the "unseen arrow" is stirring superstitious Navajos after reports of the fatal shooting of a northern reservation brave by...

Woman leads Navajos. - Mrs. Laura McCabe, at the age of forty-three, is the only woman leader among the 45,000 Navajos in northwestern New Mexico. In addition, the squaw has privileges denied white women in some states.

Navajos lend hand on soil erosion plan. - Several bureaus of the government as well as state universities and colleges and individuals are cooperating with soil erosion service in formulating and carrying out a definite program on which the working...

Navajos may move to new territory. - A planned migration of Navajo Indians from their homes on the barren, windswept plateaus of New Mexico, northern Arizona and southern Utah under consideration by the Indian affairs bureau.

Lewiston orchards girl, teacher among Navajos, tells of Indians' crude customs and superstitions. - Miss Dorothy Robel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Robel, of Lewiston Orchards, is teacher in a Navajo Indian school at Ganada, Ariz. At the recent...

Lewiston orchards girl, teacher among Navajos, tells of Indians' crude customs and superstitions. - Miss Dorothy Robel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Robel, of Lewiston Orchards, is teacher in a Navajo Indian school at Ganada, Ariz. At the recent...

Lewiston orchards girl, teacher among Navajos, tells of Indians' crude customs and superstitions. - Miss Dorothy Robel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Robel, of Lewiston Orchards, is teacher in a Navajo Indian school at Ganada, Ariz. At the recent...

Indians regain old army post. - Fort Wingate, New Mexico, 66 years military reservation, goes back to Navajos. - After holding title to Fort Wingate, New Mexico, for more than 66 years, the United States army has given the military reservation back...

Indians resent cattle control. - Howl goes up when pair who dodged sanitary rules are roughly handled. - Long-smoldering unrest among northern New Mexico Navajos over live stock control measures of the United States Indian service flared today as...

New attack made on Indian bureau. - Members of the senate Indian affairs committee directed a new attack on the Indian service today as its officials began a defense against charges made to the committee recently by Navajos of New Mexico and...

The world at large thinks that the Navajos are blankets, but in New Mexico the fact is very evident that they are Indians--and plenty of them. Their chief center is Gallup, though many also live at Thoreau, which has an elevation of some 6,000 feet...

Sleeping Indian baby wins award in Flagstaff's special beauty contest. - The Indians used a little diplomacy in the bay contest at the annual southwestern pow-wow at Flagstaff, Ariz. Of the 40 papooses entered all but one were Navajos, and the...

The symbols woven in Navajo blankets. - A trio of squaws wrapped in their native blankets and enjoying a bit of gossip concerning other members of their tribe. - The world at large thinks that the Navajos are blankets, but in New Mexico the fact is...